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1.
1. The substrate kinetic properties of cerebral hexokinases (mitochondrial and cytoplasmic) were studied at limiting concentrations of both glucose and MgATP(2-). Primary plots of the enzymic activity gave no evidence of a Ping Pong mechanism in three types of mitochondrial preparation tested (intact and osmotically disrupted mitochondria, and the purified mitochondrial enzyme), nor in the purified cytoplasmic preparation. 2. Secondary plots of intercepts from the primary plots (1/v versus 1/s) versus reciprocal of second substrate of the mitochondrial activity gave kinetic constants which differed from those obtained directly from the plots of 1/v versus 1/s or of s/v versus s, although the ratios of the derived constants were consistent. The kinetic constants obtained with the cytoplasmic enzyme from primary and secondary plots were consistent. 3. Deoxyglucose, as alternative substrate, inhibited cytoplasmic hexokinase by competition with glucose, but did not compete when MgATP(2-) was the substrate varied. The K(i) for deoxyglucose when glucose concentrations were varied was 0.25mm. 4. A range of ATP analogues was tested as potential substrates and inhibitors of hexokinase activity. GTP, ITP, CTP, UTP and betagamma-methylene-ATP did not act as substrates, nor did they cause significant inhibition. Deoxy-ATP proved to be almost as effective a substrate as ATP. AMP inhibited but did not act as substrate. 5. N-Acetyl-glucosamine inhibited all preparations competitively when glucose was varied and non-competitively when MgATP(2-) was varied. AMP inhibition was competitive when MgATP(2-) was the substrate varied and non-competitive when glucose was varied. 6. The results are interpreted as providing evidence for a random reaction mechanism in all preparations of brain hexokinase, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial. The kinetic properties and reaction mechanism do not change on extraction and purification of the particulate enzyme. 7. The results are discussed in terms of the participation of hexokinase in regulation of cerebral glycolysis.  相似文献   

2.
Yeast phosphofructokinase is strongly inhibited by Cibacron Blue F3G-A. The inhibition is competitive in respect to the phosphate donor. Fructose 6-phosphate and ATP are able to abolish the dye-inhibition. Replacement of the strong inhibitor ATP by ITP as phosphate donor gives qualitatively analogous effects. The influence of Cibacron Blue F3G-A on the kinetic pattern of yeast phosphofructokinase can be described in terms of the kinetic model of Freyer et al. [8] if one assumes that the dye binds to the ATP-binding sites in a competitive manner.  相似文献   

3.
The expression of the kinetic Hill coefficient for a two-substrate, two-product mnemonical enzyme has been derived. Its relation with the gamma coefficient, that is the slope of the reciprocal plots for 1/[A]----O, has been established. The variation of this Hill coefficient, as a function of the second substrate and product concentrations, has been studied theoretically. Whereas the gamma coefficient does not vary as a function of the substrate and first product concentrations, the kinetic Hill coefficient does. If the enzyme is positively co-operative, the Hill coefficient increases upon increasing the second substrate concentration and decreases if the first product concentration is increased. The converse is expected to occur if the enzyme displays a negative co-operativity. The last product may either reverse a positive co-operativity into a negative one or, alternatively, strengthen an already negative co-operativity. The co-operativity generated by the mnemonical model has been compared to the kinetic behaviour of a random model. These two models have been shown to be discriminated on the basis of the departure they show with respect to the Michaelis-Menten behaviour. These theoretical considerations have been applied to previously published data, obtained with wheat germ hexokinase LI. This monomeric enzyme has a negative co-operativity with respect to the preferred substrate, glucose. The Hill coefficient decreases with MgATP concentration, increases with MgADP concentration and decreases with glucose-6-phosphate concentration. This is exactly what is to be expected on the basis of the above theory of kinetic co-operativity.  相似文献   

4.
If the conformational transition involved in enzyme memory occurs in several elementary steps, the time constant of the overall 'slow' relaxation is mostly determined by the individual values of the rate constants pertaining to the overall transconformation. The extent of kinetic co-operativity of the enzyme reaction, however, is mostly controlled by the degree of reversibility of the elementary steps of the conformational transition. There is then no simple relation between the time scale of the 'slow' transition and the extent of kinetic co-operativity of the enzyme reaction. A slow transition of about 10(-3) s-1 is therefore perfectly compatible with a strong positive or negative co-operativity and in particular with the negative co-operativity observed with wheat germ hexokinase LI. The relationship that has been established recently [Pettersson, G. (1986) Eur. J. Biochem. 154, 167-170] between the 'slow' enzyme relaxation and the extent of kinetic co-operativity holds only in the specific case where the transconformation occurs in one step. Owing to the possible occurrence of a multistep conformation change, the lack of this relationship means nothing as to the validity, or the invalidity, of the concept of mnemonical transition. More informative than the time scale of the 'slow' transition is its dependence with respect to glucose and glucose 6-phosphate, which both react with the enzyme. The effect of reaction products on the modulation of kinetic co-operativity is also of cardinal importance in the diagnosis of enzyme memory. Since an alternative model has been recently proposed by Pettersson (cited above) to explain the mechanistic origin of kinetic co-operativity of monomeric enzymes, the effect of products on the kinetic co-operativity predicted by this alternative model has been studied theoretically, in order to determine whether it is consistent with the experimental results obtained with wheat germ hexokinase LI. This analysis shows that the predictions of this model are in total disagreement with both the predictions of the mnemonical model and the experimental results obtained with wheat germ hexokinase LI, as well as with other enzymes. This alternative model cannot therefore be considered as a sensible explanation of the mechanistic origin of co-operativity of monomeric enzymes. It is therefore concluded that the mnemonical model which rests on numerous experimental results, obtained by different research groups, on different enzymes is the simplest and most likely explanation of the kinetic subtleties displayed by some monomeric enzymes, and in particular wheat germ hexokinase LI.  相似文献   

5.
We conclude from X-ray diffraction studies at low resolution (7 Å) that the binding of sugar and nucleotide substrates to dimeric yeast hexokinase BII crystals exhibits both negative co-operativity and positive allosteric co-operativity. Difference electron density maps show the positions of sugar and nucleotide binding sites and extensive substrate-induced structural changes in the protein. Sugar substrates and inhibitors bind in the deep cleft that divides each subunit into two lobes and nucleotide substrates bind nearby to one site per dimer, which lies between the subunits and on the molecular symmetry axis. Although the inhibitors o- and p-iodobenzoylglucosamine and o-toluoylglucosamine bind equally to both subunits, the degree of substitution of glucose or xylose is very different for the two subunits. The substrate analog β, γ-imido ATP shows only one strong binding site per dimer. This negative co-operativity in substrate binding may result from the heterologous or non-equivalent association of the two subunits (Anderson et al., 1974), which provides non-equivalent environments for the two chemically identical subunits.Further, there is a positive allosteric interaction between the sugar and nucleotide binding sites. Sugar binding is required for nucleotide binding at the intersubunit site and the binding of nucleotide modifies the binding of sugars. These positive heterotropic interactions appear to be mediated by extensive substrate-induced structural changes in the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
Initial velocity steady-state substrate kinetics for the ATP phosphoribosyltransferase reaction in the biosynthetic direction were determined and are consistent with a sequential kinetic mechanism. To hold the fractions of magnesium-complexed substrates and products constant so as to avoid possible distortion of reciprocal velocity plots Mg2+ binding constants to the substrates ATP and phosphoribosylpyrophosphate and the product pyrophosphate were measured under assay conditions. Several conformational states of the phosphoribosyltransferase distinguishable by other criteria gave similar substrate kinetic behavior. Product inhibition studies were conducted to elucidate the binding order. Phosphoribosyl-ATP was competitive with respect to ATP and was non-competitive with respect to phosphoribosylpyrophosphate. Pyrophosphate was non-competitive with respect to both substrates. The data are consistent with the ordered Bi-Bi kinetic mechanism with ATP binding first to free enzyme and phosphoribosyl-ATP dissociating last from enzyme-product complexes.  相似文献   

7.
L P Solheim  H J Fromm 《Biochemistry》1983,22(9):2234-2239
Kinetic studies were used to investigate the mode of brain hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1, ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase) regulation by glucose 6-phosphate (glucose-6-P), ADP, and inorganic phosphate (Pi). A model for regulation of brain hexokinase by glucose-6-P and Pi had been proposed from initial-rate studies and binding experiments [Ellison, W. R., Lueck, J. D., & Fromm, H. J. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 1864-1871]. The results of the present investigation demonstrate that Pi is an activator of the brain hexokinase reaction when the reaction is studied in the nonphysiological direction. Evidence is presented which indicates that the back-reaction substrates and Pi can bind the enzyme simultaneously, and the suggestion is made that Pi binds to an allosteric site on the enzyme. These findings are in marked contrast to results obtained in the absence of ADP which convincingly demonstrate that glucose-6-P and Pi are mutually exclusive binding ligands for brain hexokinase. The kinetic data can be reconciled with the model for hexokinase regulation within the context of the well-established kinetic mechanism for brain hexokinase.  相似文献   

8.
Two recent proposals to account for the kinetic co-operativity of hexokinase D ('glucokinase') from rat liver are examined. A model in which the deviations from Michaelis-Menten kinetics result from a random order of binding of the substrates [Pettersson (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 347-350] accounts satisfactorily for the behaviour as a function of glucose concentrations, but it also predicts observable substrate inhibition by MgATP, which is in fact not observed. An alternative proposal in which the deviations arise from recycling of an enzyme-MgADP complex [Pettersson (1986) Eur. J. Biochem. 154, 167-170] also accounts satisfactorily for some of the data, but the required enzyme-MgADP complex could not be detected in isotope-exchange measurements. Thus the mnemonical mechanism proposed originally [Storer & Cornish-Bowden (1977) Biochem. J. 165, 61-69], which explains the deviations in terms of a relatively slow interconversion between two forms of free enzyme, remains the most parsimonious explanation of the behavior of hexokinase D.  相似文献   

9.
Type I hexokinase (ATP:D-hexose 6-phospotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) of porcine heart exists in two chromatographically distinct forms. These do not differ significantly in size, electrophoretic mobility at pH 8.6 or kinetic properties. Both forms obey a sequential mechanism and are potently inhibited by glucose 6-phosphate. In contrast to observations of type I hexokinase from brain, inhibition by glucose 6-phosphate is not relieved by inorganic phosphate. Under most conditions, low concentrations of phosphate (less than 10 mM) have little effect on the kinetic behaviour of the enzyme but at higher concentrations this ligand is an inhibitor. Mannose 6-phosphate inhibits in a manner analogous to glucose 6-phosphate but the Ki is much greater. In view of the similarity of the kinetic parameters governing phosphorylation of mannose and glucose, this difference in affinity for the inhibitor site is seen as consistent with the existence of a separate regulatory site on the enzyme. MgADP inhibits hexokinase but behaves as a normal product inhibitor and inhibition is competitive with respect to MgATP and non-competitive with respect to glucose.  相似文献   

10.
Previous analyses of glycolytic metabolites in Artemia embryos indicate that an acute inhibition of glucose phosphorylation occurs during pHi-mediated metabolic arrest under anoxia. We describe here kinetic features of hexokinase purified from brine shrimp embryos in an attempt to explain the molecular basis for this inhibition. At saturating concentrations of cosubstrate, ADP is an uncompetitive inhibitor toward glucose and a partial noncompetitive inhibitor toward ATP (Kis = 0.86 mM, Kii = 1.0 mM, Kid = 1.9 mM). With cosubstrates at subsaturating concentrations, the uncompetitive inhibition versus glucose becomes noncompetitive, while inhibition versus ATP remains partial noncompetitive. The partial noncompetitive inhibition of ADP versus ATP is characterized by a hyperbolic intercept replot. These product inhibition patterns are consistent with a random mechanism of enzyme action that follows the preferred order of glucose binding first and glucose-6-P dissociating last. We propose that inhibition by glucose-6-P (Kis = 65 microM) occurs primarily by competing with ATP at the active site, resulting in the formation of the dead-end complex, enzyme-glucose-glucose-6-P. Versus glucose, inhibition by glucose-6-P is uncompetitive at pH 8.0 and noncompetitive at pH 6.8. Over a physiologically relevant pH range of 8.0 to 6.8 alterations in Km and Ki values do not account for the reduction in glucose phosphorylation, and no evidence suggests that Artemia hexokinase activity is modulated by reversible binding to intracellular structures. Total aluminum in the embryos is 4.01 +/- 0.36 micrograms/g dry weight, or, based upon tissue hydration, 72 microM. This concentration of aluminum dramatically reduces enzyme activity at pH values less than 7.2, even in the presence of physiological metal ion chelators (citrate, phosphate). When pH, aluminum, citrate, phosphate, substrates, and products were maintained at cellular levels measured under anoxia, we can account for a 90% inhibition of hexokinase relative to activity under control (aerobic) conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The principles of structural kinetics, as applied to dimeric enzymes, allow us to understand how the strength of subunit coupling controls both substrate-binding co-operativity, under equilibrium conditions, and kinetic co-operativity, under steady state conditions. When subunits are loosely coupled, positive substrate-binding co-operativity may result in either an inhibition by excess substrate or a positive kinetic co-operativity. Alternatively, negative substrate-binding co-operativity is of necessity accompanied by negative kinetic co-operativity. Whereas the extent of negative kinetic co-operativity is attenuated with respect to the corresponding substrate-binding co-operativity, the positive kinetic co-operativity is amplified with respect to that of the substrate-binding co-operativity. Strong kinetic co-operativity cannot be generated by a loose coupling of subunits. If subunit is propagated to the other, the dimeric enzyme may display apparently surprising co-operativity effects. If the strain of the active sites generated by subunit coupling is relieved in the non-liganded and fully-liganded states, both substrate-binding co-operativity and kinetic co-operativity cannot be negative. If the strain of the active sites however, is not relieved in these states, negative substrate-binding co-operativity is accompanied by either a positive or a negative co-operativity. The possible occurrence of a reversal of kinetic co-operativity, with respect to substrate-binding co-operativity, is the direct consequence of quaternary constraints in the dimeric enzyme. Moreover, tight coupling between subunits may generate a positive kinetic co-operativity which is not associated with any substrate-binding co-operativity. In other words a dimeric enzyme may well bind the substrate in a non co-operative fashion and display a positive kinetic co-operativity generated by the strain of the active sites.  相似文献   

12.
1. The deoxyfluoro-d-glucopyranose 6-phosphates were prepared from the corresponding deoxyfluoro-d-glucoses and ATP by using hexokinase. 2. 3-Deoxy-3-fluoro- and 4-deoxy-4-fluoro-d-glucose 6-phosphate were substrates for glucose phosphate isomerase, and in addition the products of this reaction, 3-deoxy-3-fluoro- and 4-deoxy-4-fluoro-d-fructose 6-phosphate respectively, were good substrates for phosphofructokinase. 3. Some C-2-substituted derivatives of d-glucose 6-phosphate were found to be competitive inhibitors of glucose phosphate isomerase. 4. The possible role of the hydroxyl groups in the binding of d-glucose 6-phopshate to glucose phosphate isomerase is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The steady state kinetic properties of a simple model for an enzyme catalyzed group transfer reaction between two substrates have been calculated. One substrate is assumed to bind slowly and the other rapidly to the enzyme. Apparent substrate inhibition or substrate activation by the rapidly binding substrate may result if the slowly binding substrate binds at unequal rates to the free enzyme and to the complex between the enzyme and the rapidly binding substrate. Competitive inhibition by each product with respect to its structurally analogous substrate is to be expected if both substrates are in rapid equilibrium with their enzyme-substrate complexes. This product inhibition pattern, however, may also be observed when one substrate binds slowly. Noncompetitive inhibition with respect to the rapidly binding substrate by its structurally analogous product may result if the slowly binding substrate binds more slowly to the enzyme-product complex than to the free enzyme. Inhibition by substrate analogs which are not products should follow the same rules as inhibition by products. Thus substrate analog inhibition experiments are not particularly informative. The form of inhibition by "transition state analog" inhibitors should reveal which substrate binds slowly. There is no sharp conceptual distinction between ordered and random "kinetic mechanisms". I therefore suggest that the use of these concepts should be abandoned.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of a ligand to a one-dimensional lattice in the presence of a second ("rider") ligand, which binds only to the first ligand (piggy-back binding), is studied. A model derived from this study is used to analyze the effects of co-operativity on the reaction rates of enzymes activated by polymeric cofactors that provide multiple binding sites for the enzyme. It is found that in the presence of strong co-operativity, the steady-state reaction rates of polymer-activated enzymes can be very different from the Michaelis-Menten paradigm. By adjusting the co-operativity parameters and the binding constants of the ligands, the model can generate apparent auto-catalytic enhancement by substrates at low substrate concentrations and apparent substrate inhibition at high substrate concentrations. The model is shown to be able to explain the differences in the rates of ATP hydrolysis by DNA gyrase in the presence of long versus short DNA molecules and in the presence of long DNA molecules at different gyrase to DNA ratios.  相似文献   

15.
A system was created to model the influence of microcompartments on linked enzymatic reactions. Creatine kinase and hexokinase were covalently attached to Sepharose beads. The gel could be perfused in a specially constructed chamber inside a 360-MHz NMR spectrometer at different flow rates with solutions containing various concentrations of substrates. 31P NMR studies were carried out on the linked enzymatic reaction, creatine phosphate + glucose----creatine + glucose 6-phosphate in two enzyme gels differing in only one aspect, the average distance between hexokinase and creatine kinase. At a distance on the order of 0.1 mm between the enzymes, the average bulk concentrations of substrates and products in the perfusate determined the overall function of the linked system. At an average distance of the order of 10 nm, flux through the linked pair was much higher and much less dependent on the concentration of the intermediate substrate/product ADP/ATP. Even at adenine nucleotide concentrations far below the Km of hexokinase, substantial amounts of glucose 6-phosphate were produced when the enzymes were near but not when they were distant. From saturation transfer measurements and turnover calculations, the lifetime of ATP in the system is estimated to be 0.14-0.5 s when the enzymes are near. This compares to 6 s for distant enzymes. From this it appears that the pair of linked enzymes comprise a functional compartment supported by propinquity in which hexokinase has preferential access to ATP produced by creatine kinase, and creatine kinase to ADP from the hexokinase reaction.  相似文献   

16.
The overlapping yaaG and yaaF genes from Bacillus subtilis were cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Purification of the gene products showed that yaaG encoded a homodimeric deoxyguanosine kinase (dGK) and that yaaF encoded a homodimeric deoxynucleoside kinase capable of phosphorylating both deoxyadenosine and deoxycytidine. The latter was identical to a previously characterized dAdo/dCyd kinase (M?llgaard, H. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 8216-8220). The purified recombinant dGK was highly specific toward 6-oxopurine 2'-deoxyribonucleosides as phosphate acceptors showing only marginal activities with Guo, dAdo, and 2',3'-dideoxyguanosine. UTP was the preferred phosphate donor with a Km value of 6 microm compared with 36 microm for ATP. In addition, the Km for dGuo was 0.6 microm with UTP but 6.5 microm with ATP as phosphate donor. The combination of these two effects makes UTP over 50 times more efficient than ATP. Initial velocity and product inhibition studies indicated that the reaction with dGuo and UTP as substrates followed an Ordered Bi Bi reaction mechanism with UTP as the leading substrate and UDP the last product to leave. dGTP was a potent competitive inhibitor with respect to UTP. Above 30 microm of dGuo, substrate inhibition was observed, but only with UTP as phosphate donor.  相似文献   

17.
Glucose 6-phosphate as well as several other hexose mono- and diphosphates were found by kinetic studies to be competitive inhibitors of human hexokinase I (ATP:D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) versus MgATP. Limited proteolysis by trypsin does not destroy the hexokinase activity but produces as well-defined peptide map when the digested enzyme is electrophoresed in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. MgATP at subsaturating concentration protects hexokinase from trypsin digestion, while phosphorylated sugars, Mg2+, glucose and inorganic phosphate have no effect. Addition of glucose 6-phosphate to the MgATP-hexokinase complex at a concentration 100-times higher than its Ki was not able to reverse the MgATP-induced conformation of hexokinase, suggesting that the binding of glucose 6-phosphate and MgATP are not mutually exclusive. Similar evidence was also obtained by studies of the induced modifications of ultraviolet spectra of hexokinase by the binding of MgATP, glucose 6-phosphate and both compounds. Among a library of monoclonal antibodies produced against rat brain hexokinase I and that recognize human placenta hexokinase I, one (4A6) was found to be able to modify the Ki of glucose 6-phosphate (from 25 to 140 microM) for human hexokinase I. The same antibody also weakens the inhibition by all the other hexoses phosphate studied without affecting the apparent Km for MgATP (from 0.6 to 0.75 mM) or for glucose. These data support the view for the binding of glucose 6-phosphate at a regulatory site on the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibition studies of glucokinase were carried out with the products of the reaction, glucose 6-phosphate and MgADP-, as well as with ADP3-, Mg2+ and ATP4-. The results of these, together with those of kinetic studies of the uninhibited reaction described previously [Storer & Cornish-Bowden (1976) Biochem. J. 159, 7-14], indicate that the enzyme obeys a 'mnemonical' mechanism. This implies that the co-operativity observed with glucose as substrate arises because glucose binds differentially to two forms of the free enzyme that are not in equilibrium under steady-state conditions. The mechanism predicts the decrease in glucose co-operativity observed at low concentrations of MgATP2-. The product-inhibition results suggest that glucose 6-phosphate is released first and that it is possibly displaced by MgATP2- in a concerted reaction.  相似文献   

19.
V D Redkar  U W Kenkare 《Biochemistry》1975,14(21):4704-4712
Inactivation of bovine brain mitochondrial hexokinase by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), a sulfhydryl specific reagent, has been investigated. The study shows that the inactivation of the enzyme by DTNB proceeds by way of prior binding of the reagent to the enzyme and involves the reaction of 1 mol of DTNB with a mol of enzyme. At stoichiometric levels of DTNB, the inactivation of the enzyme is accompanied by the formation of a disulfide bond. But it is not clear whether the disulfide bond or the mixed disulfide intermediate formed prior to it causes inactivation. On the basis of considerable protection afforded by glucose against this inactivation it is tentatively concluded that the sulfhydryl residues involved in this inactivation are at the glucose binding site of the enzyme, although other possibilities are not ruled out. An analysis of effects of various substrates and inhibitors on the kinetics of inactivation and sulfhydryl modification by DTNB has led to the proposal that the binding of substrates to the enzyme is interdependent and that glucose and glucose 6-phosphate produce slow conformational changes in the enzyme. Protective effects by ligands have been employed to calculate their dissociation constant with respect to the enzyme. The data also indicate that glucose 6-phosphate and inorganic phosphate share the same locus on the enzyme as the gamma phosphate of ATP and that nucleotides ATP and ADP bind to the enzyme in the absence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

20.
Kinetic studies with skeletal-muscle hexokinase   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Rat skeletal-muscle hexokinase was partially purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation and gel filtration. The mechanism of the skeletal-muscle hexokinase was studied kinetically by initial-velocity analysis and product inhibition. Glucose 6-phosphate was a non-competitive inhibitor of glucose and ATP. ADP was a non-competitive inhibitor of glucose and a competitive inhibitor of ATP. The data on product inhibition and initial-velocity analysis of skeletal-muscle hexokinase support an ordered sequential mechanism (ordered Bi Bi) where the addition of substrates and release of products is in the order: ATP, glucose, glucose 6-phosphate and ADP.  相似文献   

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